Reliability Index
Reliability, scored like a buying decision
An engineering-first scoring system based on repeatable repair predictors: cooling, oil leaks, timing risk, gearbox behavior, electronics, and service-history sensitivity.
Strong if maintenance is proven.
Good candidates, but weak points matter.
Buy only with proof and budget.
Leaderboard
Higher score means lower predicted repair risk assuming proper maintenance.
Strong engines when maintained; cooling plastics and oil leaks are the usual cost drivers.
- Excellent driving platforms
- Many durable engines with correct intervals
- Cooling system plastics
- Oil filter housing / valve cover leaks
- Timing risk on specific engines
Owners who maintain on time and want a strong driving platform.
Drivetrains are solid; reliability varies most by electronics era and maintenance history.
- Comfort-focused durability
- Many strong drivetrain combinations
- Electronics by generation
- Diesel emissions/injector faults
- Suspension cost on some models
Daily comfort with predictable upkeep when history is clean.
Platform-dependent; timing/oil behavior and gearbox history are the big differentiators.
- Strong highway cars
- Good platforms when serviced correctly
- Timing/oil consumption by engine
- DSG / S tronic history
- Cooling and carbon buildup
Buyers who verify the exact engine and gearbox combination.
Great value; DSG and service history sensitivity are the main risk multipliers.
- Parts availability
- Strong value when serviced properly
- DSG service intervals
- Cooling and sensor aging
- Neglected maintenance
Budget-focused buyers who insist on proof and preventive service.
Methodology
The index is not a badge ranking. It is a buying-risk model: what tends to fail, how expensive it is to verify, and how much maintenance history changes the outcome.
How often the pattern appears across real ownership.
How quickly a small symptom becomes a large invoice.
How easily the risk can be checked before buying.
Core signal weights
The repeat patterns we track across German platforms.
Cooling system weak points
22%Plastics, pumps, housings, pressure control, and heat management. Failures here can escalate quickly.
Oil leaks and gasket aging
18%Valve cover, oil filter housing, rear main area, turbo oil lines, and leak location severity.
Timing risk
18%Chain, belt, tensioner, guide wear, oil interval history, and cold-start symptom evidence.
Gearbox behavior
16%Automatic and DSG/S tronic service intervals, low-speed behavior, mechatronics, and stored faults.
Electronics and sensors
14%Intermittent faults, modules, voltage history, sensor plausibility, and diagnostic complexity.
Service history sensitivity
12%The most practical risk multiplier: proof of oil, fluids, filters, gearbox service, and preventive work.
Related reliability reading
Use these before comparing models or inspecting a car.
EA888 Timing Chain Risk: What Buyers Should Understand
EA888A clear engineering explanation of EA888 timing chain risk, symptoms, inspection clues, and why service history matters.
2026-05-25
Mercedes OM651 Reliability Signals: What Fails First?
OM651The practical reliability signals to inspect on OM651 diesel cars: injectors, emissions hardware, leaks, and service history.
2026-05-24
DSG Mechatronics Warning Signs Before You Buy
DSGHow to spot early DSG and mechatronics risk through service records, shift behavior, fault scans, and test-drive feel.
2026-05-23
Why Cooling System Plastics Matter on German Cars
Cooling SystemCooling system plastics, heat cycling, leaks, and why small coolant problems can become large ownership costs.
2026-05-22
Why Low Mileage Can Still Be Risky
Buying AdviceLow mileage looks attractive, but storage, short trips, old fluids, and missing service proof can still create expensive used-car risk.
2026-05-30
The First 1,000 km After Buying a Used German Car
OwnershipWhat to do immediately after buying a used German car: fluids, scans, leaks, tires, brakes, and preventive maintenance.
2026-05-29
How to Read a Used-Car Service Invoice
Buying AdviceA practical guide to reading service invoices so you know what was actually repaired, replaced, inspected, or ignored.
2026-05-28
Want a model reliability page next?
We will expand the index into model-level pages with engine, gearbox, mileage range, known failure points, and buying checks.
How to use this index
- Compare risk bands first, then choose a brand hub.
- Use signal weights to know what to inspect before buying.
- Treat missing service history as a risk multiplier.
- Read related insights before viewing a car.